Advertisement

Guinea Bissau to transfer remains of President Vieira to a new grave

Monday November 16 2020
João Bernardo Vieira.

João Bernardo Vieira, Guinea Bissau’s former president. His remains will on November 16, 2020 be relocated from Bissau Municipal cemetery to José D’Amura fortress, a heroes’ corner. PHOTO | FILE | NMG

By ARNALDO VIEIRA

The remains of Guinea Bissau’s former President João Bernardo “Nino” Vieira will on Monday be relocated from Bissau Municipal cemetery to José D’Amura fortress, a heroes’ corner, after the country’s cabinet approved the symbolic move.

The relocation means that President Vieira will now be officially categorised as a dignified statesman and a national hero.

The fortress harbours the tombs of the country’s first President Amílcar Lopes Cabral, former Prime Minister Francisco Mendes who died in a car crash in 1978, pre-independence hero Osvaldo Vieira in whose honour the country’s main international airport is named, independence heroine Titina Silá, and Pansau Na Isna, an independence war veteran.

Nino Vieira, who was 70 at his death, was a liberation fighter murdered in his house on March 2, 2009. His killing was thought to have been a revenge attack, after the army chief of staff died in an explosion a few hours earlier.

He was the country’s longest serving president, initially from 1980 to 1999, and later from 2005 to 2009. His death probe was shelved in 2017 by the country’s government.

José D’Amura fortress was built in the heart of Bissau by the Portuguese colonialists in 1696 to protect the country from French invasion.

Advertisement
Advertisement